[...] In their new study published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society (JACS), Aalto University researchers present a way to control the fabrication of carbon nanotube thin films so that they display a variety of different colours--for instance, green, brown, or a silvery grey.
[...] With an advanced electron diffraction technique, the researchers were able to find out the precise atomic scale structure of their thin films. They found that they have very narrow chirality distributions, meaning that the orientation of the honeycomb-lattice of the tubes' walls is almost uniform throughout the sample. The chirality more or less dictates the electrical properties carbon nanotubes can have, as well as their colour.
The method developed at Aalto University promises a simple and highly scalable way to fabricate carbon nanotube thin films in high yields.
First thought: electronic kilt.
(Score: 2, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 06 2018, @04:16AM
> > "Colored Thin Films"
Whoa there, that's racist!
It is 2018 and the proper term is "Thin Films of Color"